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HTML Interview Questions and Answers
How do I align a table to the right (or left)?
You can use <TABLE ALIGN="right"> to float a table to
the right. (Use ALIGN="left" to float it to the left.)
Any content that follows the closing </TABLE> tag will
flow around the table. Use <BR CLEAR="right"> or <BR
CLEAR="all"> to mark the end of the text that is to flow
around the table, as shown in this example:
The table in this example will float to the right.
<table align="right">...</table>
This text will wrap to fill the available space to the
left of (and if the text is long enough, below) the
table.
<br clear="right">
This text will appear below the table, even if there is
additional room to its left.
How can I use tables to structure forms?
Small forms are sometimes placed within a TD element
within a table. This can be a useful for positioning a
form relative to other content, but it doesn't help
position the form-related elements relative to each
other.
To position form-related elements relative to each
other, the entire table must be within the form. You
cannot start a form in one TH or TD element and end in
another. You cannot place the form within the table
without placing it inside a TH or TD element. You can
put the table inside the form, and then use the table to
position the INPUT, TEXTAREA, SELECT, and other
form-related elements, as shown in the following
example.
<FORM ACTION="[URL]">
<TABLE BORDER="0">
<TR>
<TH>Account:</TH>
<TD><INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="account"></TD>
</TR>
<TR>
<TH>Password:</TH>
<TD><INPUT TYPE="password" NAME="password"></TD>
</TR>
<TR>
<TD> </TD>
<TD><INPUT TYPE="submit" NAME="Log On"></TD>
</TR>
</TABLE>
</FORM>
How do I center a table?
In your HTML, use
<div class="center">
<table>...</table>
</div>
In your CSS, use
div.center {
text-align: center;
}
div.center table {
margin-left: auto;
margin-right: auto;
text-align: left;
}
How do I use forms?
The basic syntax for a form is: <FORM
ACTION="[URL]">...</FORM>
When the form is submitted, the form data is sent to the
URL specified in the ACTION attribute. This URL should
refer to a server-side (e.g., CGI) program that will
process the form data. The form itself should contain
* at least one submit button (i.e., an <INPUT
TYPE="submit" ...> element),
* form data elements (e.g., <INPUT>, <TEXTAREA>, and
<SELECT>) as needed, and
* additional markup (e.g., identifying data elements,
presenting instructions) as needed.
How can I check for errors?
HTML validators check HTML documents against a formal
definition of HTML syntax and then output a list of
errors. Validation is important to give the best chance
of correctness on unknown browsers (both existing
browsers that you haven't seen and future browsers that
haven't been written yet).
HTML checkers (linters) are also useful. These programs
check documents for specific problems, including some
caused by invalid markup and others caused by common
browser bugs. Checkers may pass some invalid documents,
and they may fail some valid ones.
All validators are functionally equivalent; while their
reporting styles may vary, they will find the same
errors given identical input. Different checkers are
programmed to look for different problems, so their
reports will vary significantly from each other. Also,
some programs that are called validators (e.g. the "CSE
HTML Validator") are really linters/checkers. They are
still useful, but they should not be confused with real
HTML validators.
When checking a site for errors for the first time, it
is often useful to identify common problems that occur
repeatedly in your markup. Fix these problems everywhere
they occur (with an automated process if possible), and
then go back to identify and fix the remaining problems.
Link checkers follow all the links on a site and report
which ones are no longer functioning. CSS checkers
report problems with CSS style sheets.
Do I have to memorize a bunch of tags?
No. Most programs that help you write HTML code already
know most tags, and create them when you press a button.
But you should understand what a tag is, and how it
works. That way you can correct errors in your page more
easily.
How do I make a form so it can be submitted by hitting
ENTER?
The short answer is that the form should just have one
<INPUT TYPE=TEXT> and no TEXTAREA, though it can have
other form elements like checkboxes and radio buttons.
How do I set the focus to the first form field?
You cannot do this with HTML. However, you can include a
script after the form that sets the focus to the
appropriate field, like this:
<form id="myform" name="myform" action=...>
<input type="text" id="myinput" name="myinput" ...>
</form>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.myform.myinput.focus();
</script>
A similar approach uses <body onload=...> to set the
focus, but some browsers seem to process the ONLOAD
event before the entire document (i.e., the part with
the form) has been loaded.
How can I eliminate the extra space after a </form> tag?
HTML has no mechanism to control this. However, with
CSS, you can set the margin-bottom of the form to 0. For
example:
<form style="margin-bottom:0;" action=...>
You can also use a CSS style sheet to affect all the
forms on a page:
form { margin-bottom: 0 ; }
How can I use tables to structure forms?
Small forms are sometimes placed within a TD element
within a table. This can be a useful for positioning a
form relative to other content, but it doesn't help
position the form-related elements relative to each
other.
To position form-related elements relative to each
other, the entire table must be within the form. You
cannot start a form in one TH or TD element and end in
another. You cannot place the form within the table
without placing it inside a TH or TD element. You can
put the table inside the form, and then use the table to
position the INPUT, TEXTAREA, SELECT, and other
form-related elements, as shown in the following
example.
<form action="[URL]">
<table border="0">
<tr>
<th scope="row">
<label for="account">Account:</label>
</th>
<td>
<input type="text" name="account" id="account">
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<th scope="row">
<label for="password">Password:
</th>
<td>
<input type="password" name="password" id="password">
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> </td>
<td><input type="submit" name="Log On"></td>
</tr>
</table>
</form>
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